SAN ANTONIO, TX.- Encounter the merging of tradition and innovation through iconic pottery in O Powa O Meng: The Art and Legacy of Jody Folwell, on view at the
McNay Art Museum July 31, 2025-Jan. 4, 2026. The exhibition offers an overview of Folwells career, presenting approximately 25 works spanning more than five decades.
A contemporary potter from Khapo Owingeh (Santa Clara Pueblo, New Mexico), Folwell is widely considered among the most influential clay artists of her generation. Since devoting herself to pottery in the early 1970s, Folwell has consistently leveraged her technical skill to push the boundaries of form, content and design.
Jody Folwell is a daring artist who continues to inspire the next generation, said Matthew McLendon, Ph.D., the McNays director and CEO. O Powa O Meng both celebrates Folwells legacy and demonstrates the arc of her artistic development. The McNay looks forward to sharing her groundbreaking pottery with the San Antonio community.
Folwell is the first Pueblo artist to place personal, political and social narratives on her pottery. She pushed the boundaries of acceptable pottery styles by incorporating changes that sustain and strengthen the traditional foundation of design, blending old and new. She popularized the trend of using writing and imagery as tools for political commentary and social justice advocacy, opening the doors for other artists throughout the Pueblo pottery world.
Jody Folwell, Ancient, 2018 or 2019. Clay, paint, 11 x 11 in. Collection of Susan Ratzkin, Thousand Oaks, CA. Photo by Addison Doty. © Jody Folwell.
Visitors to the exhibition will experience some of Folwells most famous works, marking major milestones throughout her career. The artist credits her pioneering legacy to a series of half steps, where she would create works based on ancestral forms and then differentiate herself through added or altered design elements. In 1975, she entered her first submission into the prestigious Santa Fe Indian Market. Knowing she needed to create something traditional, she also desired to go against the grain. Her creation, Half a Step, combined traditional clay techniques with a creative twist. She only polished the lower and upper thirds of the jar, leaving the middle section unpolished with sculpted figures of buffalos racing the perimeter. Her 1984 submission The Hero Pot, created in collaboration with Bob Haozous, caused a stir with its non-traditional green color, painted red lightning bolts and etched images of cowboys falling from horses. The innovative work won Best of Show and altered the trajectory of Pueblo pottery.
Among her more recent works is Buffalo Soldier (2023), an assemblage of five tiles, 10 clay balls and a sculpted pot created in response to the barriers broken when Barack Obama was elected President. In Wild West Show (1996-2003), Folwell produced a Western film-style scene depicting President George W. Bush as a modern cowboy in a critique of the Iraq War. Additional pottery designs in the exhibition vary greatly from fish painted in an homage to her fathers love of fishing to a hand-polished work inspired by Japanese ceramic vessels to an etched depiction of the Rio Grande in a meditation on the life-giving force of water.
O Powa O Meng honors Jody Folwells technical brilliance and fearless innovation, as well as her commitment to storytelling that connects across generations, said Lauren Thompson, curator of exhibitions at the McNay. Each work of art tells a story not just of her own journey, but of a cultural lineage.
Folwell lives and works in Khapo Owingeh, one of six Tewa-speaking villages in northern New Mexico. The community has an ancestral and continuous tradition of pottery making. As a child, Folwell was inspired by the pots that were made and used by her family for everything from cooking and storage to gifts and economic tools. She learned pottery by watching and doing, rather than by formal instruction. O Powa O Meng translates to I came here, I got here, Im still going in the Tewa language.
The exhibition is accompanied by a fully illustrated catalogue featuring essays and personal reflections by Folwells longtime artistic peers, friends and family members. The McNay will host artist-led programs to complement the exhibition. Visit
mcnayart.org/events for details on all events.
O Powa O Meng: The Art and Legacy of Jody Folwell is organized by the Fralin Museum of Art and the Minneapolis Institute of Art. Major support for the national tour and exhibition catalogue is provided by the Terra Foundation for American Art. Curator-in-charge at the McNay Art Museum is Lauren Thompson, curator of exhibitions.
Support is provided by the Elizabeth Huth Coates Charitable Foundation of 1992; the Flora Crichton Visiting Artist Fund; Ewing Halsell Foundation, Louis A. and Francis B. Wagner Endowment; and the William Randolph Hearst Foundation.